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Occultation of the 6.0-mag. Close Double Star SAO by (9) Metis on 2001 September 7 The star was known to be a close double, sep. about 0.08” with 6.5 and 6.9-mag. Components, from a photoelectric lunar occultation recording at McDonald Obs., Texas, on 1973 April 9 Best asteroidal occultation of 2001 in the U.S.A. Unfortunately, 1 night before the occultation of a 7 th -mag. Star by Uranus’ satellite Titania in Europe & n. S. America I made the first REMOTE recording of an asteroidal occultation during this event, in the Sacramento Valley of northern California Kent Okasaki tried a remote observation of this event, but he tried to track with a 20cm SCT, and the tracking wasn’t accurate enough

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Sky-plane plot of Metis occ’n from March 2002 S&T

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Remote equipment at Orland, CA

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Another view This used my image intensifier and a 50mm Nikon lens, but similar results (with a narrower, about 3°, field of view) are possible with the PC164C.

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Mighty Mini Can record occultations of stars to mag. 9.5, even mag under good conditions

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Mighty Midi – Orion 80mm short tube Can record occultations of stars to mag. 11.0, even mag under good conditions I use visual finder scope and $60 Quantanray tripod while Scotty uses a mighty mini video as the finder and MX-350 tripod (not as sturdy as the Quantanray)

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Mighty Maxi – Orion 120mm short tube Can record occultations of stars to mag. 12.0, even mag under good conditions I use visual finder scope and an alt-az mount built from PVC pipe, bolts, wing nuts, velcro straps, 2 “clam shells” made from large-diameter PVC pipe, and a rectangular piece of wood that Scotty sold me for $50. The 2-pt. support for the heavy scope make balance and altitude adjustment tricky; placing an MX-350 tripod under the end of the camera with crumpled paper between adds a 3 rd point and stability, but re- pointing is often needed when put in place. Scotty has a better mount design for about $100 in parts that he will present at the IOTA meeting in Oct. Commercial mounts that can hold this weight cost hundreds of $, more than twice the $300 cost of the 120mm OTA.

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Programmable Remote for Timed Recordings Suggested by Steve Conard. Scotty found a “100% effective” system. Place transparent plastic tube (I believe made from 2 coin holders fastened together with Scotch tape; shown at foot of tripod) at bottom of the brown mailing bag in the background. After setting the programmable remote, place it pointing down at the tube at the bottom. Turn the Canon ZR camcorder to the VCR position with front end down facing the tube. If cold, add some hand warmers. 6 plastic tabs glued to the edges of the front of the remote, and the piece of cardboard held on with the rubber band, prevent the programmable remote from turning on, which happens whenever the screen is touched.

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Some Last Comments I haven’t had time to discuss some topics, such as recording video directly to a PC, probably the best way to record video at observatories, and also good for mobile efforts, but not for remote station use. Another important technique is the CCD drift scan technique, since many amateur and professional observers have CCD imagers for other purposes that can be used for occultations with exposures of a minute or two – see Links to more hardware and software resources are at (and without NA/) For reporting observations: In the talks later today and tomorrow, we’ll describe more advanced recording equipment and software, such as Tangra, R-OTE, and AOTA. To keep abreast of the latest observations and developments, ask questions, etc., you are encouraged to join the IOTAoccultations yahoo group: https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/IOTAoccultations/info